|
Nadine Cohodas
author of
Queen:
The Life and Music of Dinah Washington
______________________________________________
Nadine Cohodas's Queen: The Life and Music of Dinah Washington is
the landmark biography of the brief, intensely lived life and soulful music
of the great Dinah Washington.
A gospel star at fifteen, she was discovered by jazz great Lionel Hampton
at eighteen, and for the rest of her life was on the road, playing clubs,
or singing in the studio -- making music one way or another.
Dinah's tart and heartfelt voice quickly became her trademark; she was a
distinctive stylist, crossing over from the "race" music category to the
pop and jazz charts. Known in her day as Queen of the Blues and Queen
of the Juke Boxes, Dinah was regarded as that rare "first take" artist, her
studio recordings reflecting the same passionate energy she brought to the
stage. She suffered her share of heartbreak in her personal life, but
she thrived on the growing audience response that greeted her signature tunes:
"What A Difference A Day Makes ,"
"Evil Gal Blues
," and
"Baby (You've Got What It Takes)
," with Brook Benton. She made every
song she sang her own.
Dinah lives large in Queen, with her seven marriages; her penchant
for clothes, cars, furs, and diets; and her famously feisty personality --
testy one moment and generous the next. Cohodas meticulously researched
this subject; Queen is the fist book on Dinah to draw on extensive interviews
with family members and newly discovered documents.#
In our September, 2004 interview, Cohodas talks about the life of Dinah
Washington -- a complex woman who was born to entertain, and to be loved.
Interview Topics
Writing about Dinah Washington
Showing her first signs
of musical talent
Any signs of being "boy crazy?"
The challenges
of joining Lionel Hampton's band
Developing her on stage image
Changing her name
Leaving Hampton's band
The challenge of growing
her audience
The recording that widened
her appeal
Live performances
Her favorite song
Her income
Handling her money
What did she seek in a man?
Dinah's stage demeanor
The circumstances of her death
What will readers remember
about Dinah?
photo © Chuck Stewart
"She had a voice that was like the pipes of life. She could take any melody
in her hand, hold it like an egg, crack it open, fry it, let it sizzle,
reconstruct it, put the egg back in the box and back in the refrigerator,
and you would've still understood every single syllable of every single word
she sang. Every single melody she sang she made hers. Once she put her soulful
trademark on a song, she owned it and it was never the same."
- Quincy Jones
*
Listen to Dinah Washington sing
All Of Me
______________________________________________
JJM
How did Dinah Washington's music affect you to the point that
you chose to spend a good deal of your life writing about hers?
NC I discovered Bessie Smith first and then
backtracked a little to Ma Rainey. By the time I bought my first Dinah Washington
record, it was after she had languished some following her death, and when
Polygram -- the successor to Mercury Records and one of Dinah's labels --
began reissuing some of her work. The one I bought was Slick Chick: On
the Mellow Side, which had an intriguing cover and wonderful songs. I
brought it home and thought that it was pretty wonderful music. I enjoyed
the sound of her voice and the sass in it. But this was twenty-two years
ago, and I was in Washington, D.C., writing about Congress and the Judiciary
committee for Congressional Quarterly, which consumed all of my focus.
Listening to music is what one does in those "off moments." During this time,
Dinah remained in my consciousness, albeit somewhat in the background.
The first music adventure for me was through freelance articles, and that
is what led me to the Chess Brothers, who I wrote about in Spinning Blues
Into Gold. After the book came out, Dinah came charging back to the
forefront. I always remembered the sound of her voice and her intriguingly
complicated private life. I did some research to determine if a definitive
biography already existed, and felt that there was room for a serious treatment
of her life. she is a wonderful singer who left an extraordinary music legacy,
and in my view she has been under-appreciated and under-recognized.
| JJM When did Dinah -- known as Ruth Jones in her
youth -- first show signs of musical talent?
NC Almost from the moment she opened her
mouth and sang in public, which was in church. When she moved to Chicago
at age four, her mother got very involved in Saint Luke Baptist, right in
the heart of the city's black belt. Ruth started singing. According
to the Chicago Defender, by the time she was fifteen she was already
a little star, enough to be giving solo recitals. As a result of her success,
she hooked up with Sallie Martin, the colleague and one time business partner
of the great Thomas Dorsey. So, she possessed this great talent at an early
age, but she told her mother that she wanted to be a showgirl.
JJM As a young singer herself, what singer
most intrigued her?
NC By her own accounts and those of many
others, I would have to say Billie Holiday. In the very first publicity picture
taken of Dinah when she was with Lionel Hampton, she is wearing a patterned
dress slit up the side, high heeled shoes, and her hair is cut in a Paige-boy
with a gardenia pinned to it, just like Lady Day. |
Ruth Jones, age 15
*
"'I wanna be a showgirl,' Ruth told her mother more than once.
And Sallie Martin could see that her young protegee was drawn more
to the secular than the sacred. 'Shoot, she'd catch the eye of some
man and she'd be out the church before the minister finished off the
doxology.'"
- Nadine Cohodas |
photo courtesy Berna Dean Brown
Ruth and her first husband, John Young
June 24, 1942
_____
"When it came to men, Dinah was determined to do the leaving, never
wanting to risk being left."
- Nadine Cohodas |
JJM
Having been married seven times, it's safe to say that Dinah had her
share of troubles with men. Did she exhibit any signs at all of being boy
crazy during her youth?
NC From what I could gather, I would say
it was maybe a little bit the opposite of boy crazy. However, having said
that, I need to add that the reporting challenge in this biography was as
great as anything I have ever done. What you read in the book, for good or
ill, is what I was able to dig out. I was very grateful to find people who
remembered her from high school who could help me understand Dinah as well
as the community in which she lived. I think that Dinah -- still Ruth at
this time -- felt that her talent was her strongest asset, and that she wasn't
a little Lena Horne or a little Dorothy Dandridge.
She very frankly talks about her first husband as a way to get out of the
house and be able to be on her own. Then, one encounter led to another. It
is important to remember that the entertainer's life, even to this day, is
not easy. It demands a lot of work away from home. A performer is always
on the road or in a club, and the work almost exclusively is done at night.
While most of us do our work in the daylight hours and when it gets dark
we go to bed, it is the opposite for them.
JJM So, as far as you can tell, even though
she seemed to have so many insecurities around men during her adult years,
nothing you were able to uncover of her time as a young adult was particularly
unusual regarding her relationship with boys
NC Nothing beyond amateur psychological analysis,
which I am not comfortable with. But there is one thing we can say; in some
respects you can make the argument that there is a streak of moralism in
her regarding her need to be married to the man she felt close to. When she
developed a relationship that felt good to her, she thought she ought to
be married instead of just hanging around. I do believe that was important
to her. The other thing that I keep coming back to as well is that many of
her contemporaries also had very difficult personal lives, among them Billie
Holiday, Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald and Ruth Brown. They also went through
a lot of men. I don't mean this to be a cheap "out," but I think failed
relationships come with the territory, and it falls with a kind of singular
difficulty on women. It is not to say that there weren't a lot of men out
there having similar struggles, but we notice it more when they happen to
women. |
| JJM True. When she joined Lionel Hampton's band,
right away she discovered that she had some things going against her
NC Yes. Imagine how hurtful it could be to
a young woman like Dinah to be around an all male band who enjoyed telling
stories in a jocular manner. Hers was a raw talent -- raw in the most basic
sense of the word. She didn't come from a wealthy family, and in fact, she
barely had a suitcase. When she walked on the band's bus, the reaction she
received from the members was, "Oh my God, this is our new singer?"
JJM Situations like this drove her on a life
long quest to keep her weight down...
NC Yes, and to look good, not only sound
good. She loved mink, which was a sign of status. As soon as stars
of the era could afford one, they would buy a fur, along with beautiful jewelry
and fancy cars. But what was so striking to me was that the first thing that
Dinah did was buy a house, at age twenty-three, for her mother and siblings.
Her sister Clarissa said that from the moment Dinah started making money,
their lives improved.
JJM
You wrote of her early stage career, "Hampton had plucked her out of the
Garrick Stagebar and taken her out on the road without any advance planning.
She was 'raggedy,' he admitted, and it was true that Dinah didn't have fancy
dresses and the accessories to go with them. Back in Chicago, she confided
to friends, she had had to borrow her mother's nylon stockings every now
and then when she was trying to get jobs in the clubs." Who helped
Dinah develop her on stage image?
NC Well, the best evidence I have is that
it was Gladys Hampton, Lionel's wife. I believe it was Gladys who helped
Dinah get a sense of how to look nice on stage. Because they were similar
in size, early on Dinah could borrow some of Gladys's gowns, before she figured
out what she wanted to look like and before she could afford the clothing
herself. |
Lionel Hampton
_____
"'I knew she was the girl I was looking for,' Hampton said. He
liked her 'gutty style.' It wasn't that she was brassy. Her voice
was too crisp and clear for that. But she sang with conviction, direct
yet with feeling. Hampton was certain she could be heard 'even with
my blazing band in the background.'"
- Nadine Cohodas
*
The Man I Love  |
Frank
Driggs Collection
Dinah Washington and Lionel Hampton, 1945
_____
"If she was going to sing with a big band, and a hot one at that,
the plain and pedestrian 'Ruth Jones' would not do. Hampton and Glaser claim
credit for giving Ruth a new name. But verifiable chronology suggests it
was Joe Sherman who came up with 'Dinah Washington.' 'You ought to
have something that rolls off people's tongues, like rich liquor,' he explained,
and to him 'Dinah Washington' fit the bill.'"
- Nadine Cohodas
*
Blow Top Blues
|
JJM Of his wife's influence on Dinah,
Hampton said, "What was interesting after Gladys went to work, the guys in
the band started noticing Dinah's legs and feet, and they nicknamed her 'Legs.'"
NC There is a photograph in the book of Dinah
standing with Lionel on stage, in which she displays a kind of innocent
exuberance. It is hardly a smashingly stylish look. Contrast that with some
of the later pictures, for example one of her at the Newport Jazz Festival
in a mink stole, and many others in which she is looking pretty great.
JJM She
entered Hampton's band as Ruth Jones but left it as Dinah
Washington
Correct?
NC That was one of the great things that
I discovered. She herself discredited the notion that it was Hampton who
came up with the stage name Dinah Washington. She credits Chicago club
owner Joe Sherman, who gave her her first singing job. I believe that
is true because I found a little clip in Down Beat that talked about
Dinah Washington making her South side debut, singing with Lionel Hampton.
So she already was Dinah when Hampton found her and brought her to
the city's Regal Theater.
JJM So, how did Sherman come up with that
name?
NC As the critic/producer/writer Leonard
Feather noted, this was during a time when Ethel Waters -- who was a heroine
to so many black women in the entertainment world, and justifiably so --
had recorded "Dinah," ("Is there anyone finer?"), and Dinah Shore was making
her ascent in mainstream white America. So "Dinah" could resonate in two
worlds. Washington was the name of a president and had something of
an aristocratic bearing. When the names are put together --Dinah Washington
the rhythm of her name is the same as those of Billie Holiday and
Ella Fitzgerald. Two syllable first names, three syllable last names, all
taken together an evocative choice. |
| JJM
Regarding her departure from Hampton's band in 1945, Dinah said,
"I knew I was going to be the best singer in the business, but wasn't getting
anywhere with Hampton." How did they part ways?
NC There is a story that Dinah had a little
pistol she pulled on Hampton to get out of the contract, but Dinah herself
never said that, nor did Hampton, including in his autobiography. So, while
neither of them mentions this story, and I found no evidence that it was
true, I felt I had to mention it as a myth. What is more important was getting
the reader to understand what it meant to be the girl singer in a big band.
Here is Dinah -- a kid at the time -- brimming with talent, energy,
determination, who wants to sing and record, but she only gets to sing two
songs a night. Hampton and his band are the stars, and she has to sit by
the side of the stage until she is called. By this time, at the end of 1945,
Dinah is twenty-one years old and living in Los Angeles, and decides to give
it a go on her own. She leaves Hampton and within two weeks she is in a little
studio making blues sides for Apollo Records, a New York independent label.
JJM After she left Hampton, what difficulties
did she encounter as a solo artist?
NC I am tempted to say that Dinah made a
pretty smooth transition. She walked out of the job with Hampton, and two
weeks later was in the studio recording these sides for Apollo. Not much
later, they are released. She goes back to Chicago, and Beryl Adams, who
hooked up with Irving Green to start Mercury Records, said he wanted to sign
her to his label because he felt she could help his "race" division. On January
14th, 1946, not even two months after she left Hampton, she was in the studio
recording for Mercury, and by February, her first Mercury single came out.
So, one could argue on that score that she didn't have too much trouble.
On the other hand, she had difficulty getting noticed by those at Down
Beat and Metronome, who loved Dinah when she was with Hampton.
Initially, her abilities as a solo artist were judged to be those of just
another black singer. But in terms of her ability to do what she wanted,
it seems to me that she was pretty lucky. Things fell into place with her
recordings, and shortly thereafter, Ben Bart, the booking agent, took her
on and put her on the road in the South on what can only be described as
killer tours. I say "killer" because you can imagine how difficult one-nighters
must have been for an African American woman traveling that part of the country
during the forties. |
photo University of Missouri, Kansas City
Dinah, circa 1947
_____
"...at the end of 1946, when they (Down Beat and
Metronome) published their reader polls, one effect of Dinah's decision
to strike out on her own was evident: reduced visibility. She didn't show
up at all in Down Beat's contest. In Metronome she tied
for twenty-third with Martha Tilton...These two polls reflected a rather
select, mostly white audience, albeit an audience more receptive to black
musicians and black culture than the general population. But if the
magazine polls reflected one reality, another gave Dinah palpable evidence
that she was on the right course: three records on Apollo, three more on
Mercury, new sessions in the works for the next year, and steady work in
the clubs. Beyond that was the creative satisfaction and release, two
things Hampton couldn't give her."
- Nadine Cohodas
*
I Know How to Do It
 |
_____
"I'm happiest when I'm singing for people who pay
$1.25 in hard earned nickels and dimes and quarters tied at the
end of a dirty handkerchief because I feel these people
want to hear me sing. These people, I never want to
let them down, because they appreciate the things I'm
singing."
- Dinah Washington
*
_____
"You don't forget her - her tonality. She had pitch. Her intonation
was fantastic. Her diction was impeccable. There is never a question about
what did she say. You knew right away."
- Trumpeter Clark Terry
*
Lover, Come Back To Me
 |
JJM
What challenges did these record companies face in growing an audience
for her music?
NC Well, how do you get your product out
there? Dinah's core audience was black America, the juke boxes, a few little
radio stations, and the mom and pop record stores. Her audience was also
discovering her through the black press -- there was very little information
about her in the mainstream press. It was relatively easy to figure out how
to get that audience, but it was only going to be so big. When Bobby Shad
came to Mercury in 1954, the company created the Emarcy imprint, which was
primarily a jazz label. Shad felt there was a jazz sensibility in Dinah's
work, and having her record for Emarcy was a way to get her into the jazz
world.
JJM She had such an extensive background singing
what the white press categorized as the blues that it was going to be difficult
for her to break out beyond that. You wrote, "A black woman singing blues,
with all its sass and sensuality, was easy to accept. Hearing her in a different
context -- a ballad more about romance than sex -- was something else, more
acceptable from Dinah Shore than Dinah Washington."
NC Right, it was really striking to me to
listen to her music and then compare it to how the white critics of the time
would characterize it. This was part of her challenge to grow beyond her
core audience. But she kept forging ahead, and then, in 1955, she performed
at the second Newport Jazz Festival, where she was extremely successful.
I had the good fortune of listening to a recording of that performance, and
could hear the audience response and their call for encores. There was
confirmation from the writers as well concerning how well she performed.
JJM Would you say that live performance stood
out as the most critical in terms of her career growth?
NC Oh, gee, I don't know. Would I want to
go that far? She performed so much. I didn't actually think of it that way,
but the quality of her performance at Newport was a credential that couldn't
be denied her.
JJM
What recording established her popularity with a white audience?
NC I would say it has to be "What a Difference
a Day Makes," from 1959, because it was her most commercially successful
-- she won a Grammy for it. Immediately following that she had great success
with "Unforgettable." While she had recorded with strings before, when Mercury
A&R man Clyde Otis brought in Belford Hendricks, the sound was a little
more robust and percussive. When I was working on this book and people would
ask me what song Dinah was known for, when I told them "What a Difference
a Day Makes," they would say, "Oh, yeah" in recognition. |
| JJM She had some reservations about singing
with strings
NC Yes, she did. Clyde Otis told her that
she could reach a broader audience by employing strings. She felt she had
done all right without needing strings, and told Otis she wanted to only
record with horns. For one reason or another, he was able to convince her
to record. She told him that she would only give him one take, which was
the way Dinah liked to do it, and they made it happen.
JJM Yes, it was pretty miraculous, really...
NC That is how he remembers it, and I have
had several musicians say to me that Dinah liked to do first takes. I don't
believe that should be particularly surprising, because when we go back and
reflect on how her singing career started, it was up there in the church
choir loft, where she didn't get a second chance. Then Hampton plucked her
out of the Stagebar and had her come on stage to sing with him. She basically
got two songs a night, and she had to be ready to sing them. Before she stepped
up to that first microphone in the studio, her entire professional life required
her to be ready to sing. Under those circumstances, you either had the goods
or you didn't. |
photo © Chuck Stewart
Belford Hendricks, Clyde Otis, Dinah (l - r)
*
What A Diff'rence A Day Makes  |
_____
"I'm happiest when I'm singing for people who pay $1.25 in hard
earned nickels and dimes and quarters tied at the end of a dirty handkerchief
because I feel these people want to hear me sing. These people, I never want
to let them down, because they appreciate the things I'm
singing."
- Dinah Washington
*
I've Got You Under My Skin
_____
"Even when she was haughty, Dinah could be fun. When another singer
dropped in to see her at a San Francisco club, eager to show off her new
fur, the woman hollered, 'Hey, Dinah, have you seen my new white mink coat?'
'Come on outside,' Dinah retorted, 'and see my new white
chauffeur.'"
- Nadine Cohodas
*
Baby (You've Got What It Takes)
 |
JJM
You wrote about a live performance of Dinah's that took place in 1954
at the Regal, "She strode away from the spotlight without saying a word,
sat down on a step at the side of the stage, and sang a quiet blues, the
audience hanging on every word; 'Nobody knows the way I feel this morning./If
I had my way, don't you know the graveyard is where my man would lay.' The
emotion was raw, a moment when Dinah let the audience know how she was feeling
-- a reminder too, that the lyrics she sang with such feeling were not simply
a story but the truth about her life." How different was her live repertoire
from her recordings?
NC As is the case for many singers, I think
it was pretty close. I was able to listen to some of her radio broadcasts
where she sings songs from her most current record in order to promote it.
I also got the distinct feeling that Dinah's live sets were very much a
reflection of her mood on that date, particularly later on, when she was
playing for long periods of time in Las Vegas. I do believe that her live
sets generally included songs she had just recorded, but then always drew
on something from those earliest years. Even as her career evolved, Dinah
never completely left singing the blues.
JJM What
was her favorite song?
NC She talked about Bessie Smith and
"Backwater Blues " a couple of times in long interviews. I don't know that it is
fair for me to say that that was her favorite song to sing, but she certainly
talked about it. I put
"Trouble
in the Lowlands" on the CD I put together in conjunction with my book.
It was recorded in 1961, right before she left Mercury, and in the nine-minute
recording, while Dinah may be in better voice on other songs, from this song
you do get the sense of what it was like when Dinah would be in a particular
mood in a club, and the song would just go on while the musicians tried to
hang on with her. |
|
JJM She said that she wasn't the highest paid
black female singer, but, I was really struck by the amount of money she
earned.
NC It startled me as well, to tell you the
truth.
JJM How did her income compare with other
singers of the era?
NC Sarah Vaughan and Ella Fitzgerald had
deep jazz followings -- which is another way of saying they had a larger
white audience. I am guessing that because of that, they were probably making
more money than Dinah. When Norman Granz took Ella on the road in the "Jazz
at the Philharmonic" tours, her life stopped being one-nighters in small
clubs. While Dinah was making a lot of money -- for example for the
jobs in Las Vegas -- she had to pay the band out of her earnings. And, on
top of that, she had an enormous tax bill
JJM
Yes, her finances were not handled well. Where in the world
was her manager -- Joe Glaser -- when his client was making such large sums
of money, knowing she was spending much of it on lavish gifts for herself
as well as supporting her entire family?
NC By this time Joe Glaser was way up in
the corporation. Ruth Bowen was really more involved with her business affairs.
She told me that they tried to keep her on a budget, but their instructions
were that anything her family wanted, they could have. The taxes she owed
were so significant that David Dinkens -- the former New York mayor who was
her attorney at the time -- said the IRS practically camped out in his office.
This is hardly anything new in the world of entertainment.
A salient factor to me is the impact of Dinah's death on those she loved.
Beyond the fact that she lives no more, Dinah was the entire enterprise.
When she died, there was no more income it was like turning off a
spigot. There was no more earning power, and the IRS put a lien on the only
thing they could count on, the Mercury Records assets. It was very sad, very
tragic.
I wish I had better answers concerning her money matters, but I don't. I
wanted to treat Dinah's life and career with respect, and I thought that
it was appropriate to draw inferences from things that I knew, but there
was precious little information when I started, and that is why the reporting
challenge was so difficult. Dinah was a star of black America, and it was
only toward the end of her life that white America began to appreciate her.
She is not someone whose life is learned about on the pages of the
Washington Post or Time or Life -- she is discovered
in Ebony, Sepia, Jet and the newspapers of black America.
JJM
I want to get back to the subject of men, because her choices
were such an important theme in her life. She said, "I just can't find anyone
who is really in my corner. Companionship is the greatest thing in the world.
That's what I'm looking for. I don't expect a fellow to make as much as I
do. The money's there; that shouldn't be any worry, but it's awfully hard
to find someone who doesn't make a problem of finances." What did she truly
seek in a man?
NC Probably just what she said there, but
it is very clear that Dinah liked to control things. Until her last marriage
-- to "Night Train" Lane, and it is impossible to know where that was headed
-- most of the men who came into her life were dependent on her in some way.
They were "Mr. Dinah Washington." She once said, "I don't understand why
a man wouldn't want to be with a queen," and from that, you can get a sense
of how imperious she was. She led a very difficult life in terms of combining
business with happiness. She couldn't have "the white picket fence" and still
be a singing star, although I don't believe she ever gave up trying.
JJM Correct, but there were many successful
women during the era who didn't get married seven times. She seemed to follow
a moral compass regarding relationships that may have forced her into unwanted
marriages. She went from one marriage to the next with only a few breaks
in between. It was as if she couldn't be without a man.
NC I think that's right. The longest stretch
without being married was between 1957 and 1961. One of her marriages, to
Rafael Campos, didn't even last the time it took for a Sepia magazine
article to be published on the newlyweds. By the time this big feature
hit the newsstands, Rafael was on his way.
In the early fifties, there was an interchange with Dinah and Symphony Sid
Torin, just before she is about to sing live. He introduces her and, just
before she sings "Please Send Me Someone to Love," Sid asks her if that song
is for her. She tells him, "No. I have all I need." She already had four
marriages by this time, yet she is nothing but cheery.
At that moment, she could have said to Sid, "Yes, I have had my share of
trouble, haven't I?" She did in a later piece in Ebony where she said,
"With me, it is Blowtop Blues' all the time." But with Sid, she bypassed
the opportunity and instead, sang this lovely, haunting, and piercing
version of "Please Send Me Someone to Love." Dinah is probably looking down
from above and just laughing her head off at all this, and saying, "Honey,
I had a lot of fun and I made a lot of good records."
JJM It is safe to say that she had some issues
around even acknowledging that she contributed to the failures of her marriages.
NC Yes, I agree completely. I do not think
she was an introspective person. She did not live her life overtly at that
level. What I found particularly interesting was how her decisions about
men affected her two sons. I was able to spend some time with her son Robert,
and he has no memory of his mother telling them about her breakup with Eddie,
one of her husbands who her sons were particularly fond of. She never bothered
to explain that she and Eddie were having difficulties. So, while the boys
were taken care of -- beautifully dressed, and loved by their mother -- I
believe in some unconscious way, they had developed their own armor.
JJM Bassist Paul West said of Dinah, "I found
out she is a very lonesome person, afraid to be alone, almost like a little
country girl, a little girl caught in a storm, can't find shelter. That's
when I realized how vulnerable she was, as opposed to this image she presents
onstage, an image offering her protection."
NC Right, and something that Keter Betts
told me too is that when Dinah was out on the road with the trio all those
years, she was trying to negotiate the whole deal, dealing with club owners,
record company executives, and others. She was running a business, and her
being a powder puff or a sugar plum was not going to work.
JJM
I am curious about her on stage demeanor. There were instances where
she was quite rude to her audience
NC The word her son used is "indignant."
Dinah believed very much in an implied contract between the performer and
the audience -- she agreed to sing, the audience agreed to listen. She felt
that if she was going to be on stage, the audience should be attentive, with
all eyes on her. She had different strategies concerning how to quiet an
audience, and they became part of her personality. Often, people came to
see her just to see what would happen on stage.
JJM
The circumstances of her death are that she took the wrong set of
pills
NC Yes, that is correct. What more can I
do other than look at the death certificate and the autopsy? One of my doctors
very kindly read it over and even called the lab for me. The fact is that
both bottles of pills were still on her nightstand, and while she had a very
small amount of these fast acting sedatives in her body, it was enough to
be a lethal.
Dinah had everything to look forward to. Her boys had just come home. All
the Christmas presents were wrapped. She had just talked with her dear friend
Bea Buck about getting a better handle on all her Mercury recordings for
something she was going to do the next week. Everything I know I put in there.
I am not equipped to argue with an autopsy report.
JJM
You wrote, "Apart from (husband) Rafael's appearance, an added fillip
was Eddie Chamblee's presence as the bandleader. The tableau on the Apollo
stage was as strange as it was titillating. There was Dinah with one ex-husband
behind her and the estranged one by her side, listening as she teased him
with 'Our Love is Here to Stay.' Such was the roller coaster of Dinah's romantic
life that a new boyfriend was probably in the dressing room waiting for her."
As great as her musical achievements, it is hard not to feel that her social
life and marital failures are a huge part of her legacy. What do you think
the impression people will have of Dinah's life after they read your book?
NC I hope that what readers come away with
is that her life was lived at breakneck speed, and that during it, an
extraordinary amount of wonderful music was created -- performed in an America
before society really opened up. That is how I see it. I choose to think
that her legacy is in her music, and that it always triumphs over what I
have to come to call "the flamboyant complications of Dinah's personal life."
In addition to her marital difficulties, her life-long struggle to keep her
weight down was well known, and she so willingly made that a part of the
public conversation about herself. In that regard she was way ahead of her
time. But in the end, people bought her records to hear her music, and they
went to clubs to watch her on stage, and I really do think that is what survives. |
photo © Chuck Stewart
Dinah with her two sons, George and Bobby, 1960
*
"Like most women, I wanna be loved, and despite what many critics
may say, I see nothing wrong in that. Mine has been a never-ending search
for love and affection, but for some reason, without success."
- Dinah Washington
A sampling of her relationships
_____
photo courtesy Clarissa Smith
George Jenkins, 1946
*
photo courtesy William Battles
Robert Grayson (left), 1947
*
Walter Buchanan, 1950
*
photo courtesy Clarissa Smith
Jimmy Cobb, left, 1953
*
photo © Chuck Stewart
Eddie Chamblee, 1957
*
photo © Chuck Stewart
Rusty Maillard, 1959
*
Michael Ochs
Archive
Rafael Campos, 1961
*
photo Boris Zlatich
Dick "Night Train" Lane, 1963
_____
Please Send Me Someone To Love
 |
______________________________________________
photo National Archives
Dinah Washington, at Newport
_____
"When you get inside of a tune, the soul in you should come out. You should
just be able to step back and let that soul come right out."
*
I Get A Kick Out Of You
Queen:
The Life and Music of Dinah Washington
by
Nadine Cohodas
*
About Nadine Cohodas
Nadine Cohodas is the author of, most recently, Spinning Blues Into
Gold: The Chess Brothers and the Legendary Chess Records, which was inducted
into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame as a classic of blues literature,
as well as, Strom Thurmond and the Politics of Southern Change, and
The Band Played Dixie: Race and the Liberal Conscience at Ole Miss.
She lives in Washington, D.C.
Dinah Washington products at Amazon.com
Nadine Cohodas products at Amazon.com
_______________________________
This interview took place on September 13, 2004
*
If you enjoyed this interview, you may want to read our interview with Bessie Smith biographer Chris Albertson.
_______________________________
Other
Jerry Jazz Musician interviews
# Text from publisher.
|